勒索;敲诈 the crime of demanding money from a person by threatening to tell sb else a secret about them
胁迫;威胁;恐吓 the act of putting pressure on a person or a group to do sth they do not want to do, for example by making threats or by making them feel guilty
emotional/moral blackmail 情感上 / 道德上胁迫
verb
勒索;敲诈;要挟;胁迫 to force sb to give you money or do sth for you by threatening them, for example by saying you will tell people a secret about them
She blackmailed him for years by threatening to tell the newspapers about their affair. 她以向报纸公开他们的恋情要挟了他很多年。
The President said he wouldn't be blackmailed into agreeing to the terrorists' demands. 总统说他不会因受恐怖分子的威胁而答应他们的要求。
N-UNCOUNT 勒索;敲诈;讹诈 Blackmail is the action of threatening to reveal a secret about someone, unless they do something you tell them to do, such as giving you money.
It looks like the pictures were being used for blackmail... 这些照片好像被用于敲诈勒索。
Opponents accused him of blackmail and extortion. 对方指控他敲诈勒索。
N-UNCOUNT (情感或道德上的)迫使,胁迫 If you describe an action as emotional or moral blackmail, you disapprove of it because someone is using a person's emotions or moral values to persuade them to do something against their will.
The tactics employed can range from overt bullying to subtle emotional blackmail. 从公然威吓到微妙的情感胁迫,各种战术都用上了。
VERB 勒索;敲诈;讹诈 If one person blackmails another person, they use blackmail against them.
He told her their affair would have to stop, because Jack Smith was blackmailing him... 他告诉她说他们的婚外情必须结束了,因为杰克·史密斯正在敲诈他。
The government insisted that it would not be blackmailed by violence... 政府坚持说它不会接受暴力讹诈。
I thought he was trying to blackmail me into saying whatever he wanted. 我认为他想敲诈我,让我说出他想知道的一切。